Sir Roger Scruton and Dr. Jordan Peterson on transcendence

I just re-listened to a conversation between Sir Roger and Dr. Peterson: Sir Roger Scruton/Dr. Jordan B. Peterson: Apprehending the Transcendent. Here are a few somewhat random thoughts — blending what they say with my own ideas.

The idea of the transcendent (i.e., the way I think they’re using the term) is that there’s a truth beyond what we can perceive by thinking. That’s why we tend to associate “transcendent” with music and landscapes and art and ritual. (Poetry for some, but not for me. I don’t get poetry.) When we appreciate art, we feel that we’re a part of something real, but we can’t reduce it to words.

That’s one of the unfortunate realities of the modern world. We tend to prefer debunking explanations that reduce things to the lowest possible components. E.g., that everything can be explained as a power struggle, or that life is merely mechanical, or that morality can be derived from science, etc. Sir Roger asks why there is such a will to explain beautiful things that we love (such as love itself) in simple, ugly terms (e.g., power or dominance).

Dr. Peterson said the claim that everything comes down to power is itself a justification for the use of power.

A thing in itself is always more than our apprehension of it. That’s a good thing, practically speaking. We take useful mental shortcuts so we can get along with life without trying to understand the nature of the lion that’s threatening to eat us. But those mental shortcuts often leave us with the false impression that we know more than we do. Things are far more real than what we can possibly perceive.

Dr. Peterson said the transcendent could be thought of as the conjunction between the factual and the meaningful. Sir Roger tacked on the idea that teaching the humanities invites people to open themselves to a truth that’s beyond what is known.

The conversation strayed beyond the transcendent into commentary on culture, which Sir Roger usefully summarized as the residue of all the things people have felt worthy of preservation.

One problem with our culture is the dominance of zero sum thinking. Dr. Peterson explained this as a justification for resentment, and Sir Roger built on that idea. People have a feeling of loss — that there is more to life, but they don’t know how to get at it. They feel it’s been stolen from them by all the people who are rich and at ease in the world.

Another problem is our inability to put theory and ideology aside and to simply celebrate the normal. Sir Roger said we have an almost hysterical relationship to human choice. We believe that we have created everything (e.g., “gender is a social construct”) so we believe we can change everything.

We have to ask ourselves whether we’re entities that participate in a higher transcendent plane (or, to make it sound less spooky, in a reality that transcends what we think we know), or do we simply create everything ourselves?

There was also some interesting commentary on dance. Dr. Peterson said that the punk rockers who get carried away in the mosh pit are experiencing a transcendence that they would deny ideologically, but Sir Roger was having no part of seeing any beauty in punk rock or mosh pits, and turned the conversation to the old school way of dancing — which he called dancing with — against the new dancing — which he sees as dancing against. In a Scottish Reel, for example, you’re dancing with the community. In a waltz, you’re dancing with your partner. Modern dancing, by contrast, is very narcissistic and individual.

Sir Roger said that traditional teaching is a teaching of love. “Here’s something I love, and I want you to love it too.” But modern teaching is a teaching of hate. E.g., here’s how we can disassemble everything meaningful in your life and explain it in crass, ugly terms.

One section that strayed a little from the topic of transcendence was when Dr. Peterson mentioned a theory about female political involvement. I found very interesting. He said we know what male political principles look like, because that’s most of what we’ve seen. But we’re only recently starting to get a look at what female political principles might look like.

He took it back to the idea (similar to themes I discuss in Eggs are Expensive, Sperm is Cheap) that women have a lot at stake in relations with men, and one of the things they want to know is whether or not the man is a predator.

He didn’t unpack that very much, so I’ll do it for him. When a woman gets pregnant, she becomes very vulnerable. She is going to need someone — or a group of someones — to protect her and help her with the child for several years.

She also knows that men want to mate with her, and one thing she has to consider is whether they are merely predators — just trying to get what they want — or whether they are going to be around and supportive. Dr. Peterson said that mindset helps to explain some of the changes women seem to want to make regarding the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof. I.e., first we assume that you’re a predatory male (“all men are rapists”), and you have to prove that you’re not.

Getting back to culture and the transcendent, the moderator asked how we can coax people back into a view of relations to others rather than gratification of the self. Sir Roger said we need to teach that relationships of dependence (which are often seen these days as negative things) can be very positive on both sides. Dr. Peterson said we need to create a positive vision about love for beauty and truth, and to tell people that participation in the great tradition is more enjoyable and meaningful than passing nihilistic pleasure.

Finally, they both agreed that we should cut funding for schools, to which I say Amen.

It was an interesting conversation, and if you have 90 minutes to spare, you should give it a listen.

Coronavirus. Are we doomed, or is this just a slightly worse flu?

The Coronavirus seems scary.

We like to think that we’re pretty safe in the modern world. When we get sick, we go to the doctor and get some amazing modern medicine, and we get better. Even horrible things like cancer seem to be yielding to advances in medicine.

But … there have been dreadful illnesses in the past (even the relatively recent past) that have wiped out huge numbers of people. Why should we feel we are exempt?

The question remains … should we panic or not? Here’s my quick over / under on it.

Reasons to panic.

* The Chinese can’t be trusted, part 1. They’re under-reporting cases and keeping this under wraps.
* The Chinese can’t be trusted, part 2. This might be a virus that escaped from one of their weapons labs, and they don’t want to let the rest of the world know.
* Despite immense incentives to keep people with coronavirus alive (to avoid panic), the death toll is mounting.
* So far, the virus has been in relatively advanced cultures. If it were to hit the third world, absolute chaos would ensue.

Reasons not to panic.

* Unlike diseases of the past, we have incredible infrastructure to deal with this. The CDC and other very competent professionals are on the case.
* People die from the flu every year. This is just another version of the flu.
* The media is in the business of scaring us. Scary stories increase eyeballs and clicks. So don’t believe what you hear.
* There have been lots of “end of the world” scares recently that fizzled. Why should we believe this one?

What do you think?

An important Gospel lesson from Elizabeth Warren

You may have seen the video showing two different Elizabeth Warren interviews where she is clearly following a script. Her monologue in each case follows the same theme, the same order, and often uses exactly the same words. But not always.

It seems funny at first, but if you spend any time at all thinking about it, it makes perfect sense.

In college, I spent a lot of time listening to Tom Short, an open-air preacher. There were several questions/comments that would come up again and again — e.g., “what about the heathen in Africa?,” or “what about all the different translations of the Bible?,” or “love is all you need, Tom” — and over the years, Tom refined his answers. It got to the point that I could predict what he was going to say. Almost word for word.

When someone spends a lot of time speaking publicly, they develop patterns and scripts. They have talking points they want to communicate, and they have ways of answering certain questions. They tell the same stories and illustrations. Over and over and over again.

With that background, when I first started reading critical analyses of the Gospels, I was somewhat surprised that New Testament scholars seem oblivious to this. They assumed that if a passage in Luke sounds like a passage in Mark, both passages had to be relating the same event.

Of course they might be, but it’s also a dead certainty that most of Jesus’ teachings in the New Testament were said over and over and over again. In different cities, at different times, with different audiences, … but sometimes in the same city with similar audiences.

There were certain hecklers who came back, time and again, to challenge Tom with the same sorts of questions. And I’m sure the same was true with Jesus.

“Remember the time Jesus was asked about divorce by the Pharisees?” someone might ask.

“Ha!” St. Peter might say. “I can think of at least ten times.”

Remember the conditions for the replacement for Judas?

Therefore it is necessary that of the men who have accompanied us all the time that the Lord Jesus went in and out among us — beginning with the baptism of John until the day that He was taken up from us — one of these must become a witness with us of His resurrection.

These were people who heard Jesus speak again and again and again. They got the rhythm of his answers. They knew phrases and favorite words. They knew the illustrations he would use.

Is it any surprise that there might be several different versions of key parables and stories?

I don’t think so. And the fact that they don’t precisely agree doesn’t mean they’re inaccurate.

Pigweed and Crowhill review the impeachment

The boys drink and review Bygone Snowfall from DuClaw brewing company to prepare for a conversation about impeachment.

This program was recorded when impeachment was supposed to be over. I.e., right after the Senate had voted to acquit. So we were supposed to think that was the end. But … is it?

P&C review the meaning and purpose of impeachment in general, and comment on this process and how it was managed. (Spoiler — Crowhill explains how he changed his mind on the meaning of “high crimes and misdemeanors.”)